Transplantation Direct (Nov 2017)

Comparative Assessment of Anti-HLA Antibodies Using Two Commercially Available Luminex-Based Assays

  • Kevin J. Clerkin, MD, MSc,
  • Sarah B. See, PhD,
  • Maryjane A. Farr, MD, MSc,
  • Susan W. Restaino, MD,
  • Geo Serban, PhD,
  • Farhana Latif, MD,
  • Lingzhi Li,
  • Paolo C. Colombo, MD,
  • George Vlad, PhD,
  • Bryan Ray, PhD,
  • Elena R. Vasilescu, MD,
  • Emmanuel Zorn, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/TXD.0000000000000734
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 11
p. e218

Abstract

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Background. Allospecific anti-HLA antibodies (Abs) are associated with rejection of solid organ grafts. The 2 main kits to detect anti-HLA Ab in patient serum are commercialized by Immucor and One Lambda/ThermoFisher. We sought to compare the performance of both platforms. Methods. Background-adjusted mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) values were used from both platforms to compare sera collected from 125 pretransplant and posttransplant heart and lung transplant recipients. Results. Most HLA class I (94.5%) and HLA class II (89%) Abs with moderate to high MFI titer (≥4000) were detected by both assays. A modest correlation was observed between MFI values obtained from the 2 assays for both class I (r = 0.3, r2 = 0.09, P < 0.0001) and class II Ab (r = 0.707, r2 = 0.5, P < 0.0001). Both assays detected anti–class I and II Ab that the other did not; however, no specific HLA allele was detected preferentially by either of the 2 assays. For a limited number of discrepant sera, dilution resulted in comparable reactivity profiles between the 2 platforms. Conclusions. Immucor and One Lambda/ThermoFisher assays have a similar, albeit nonidentical, ability to detect anti-HLA Ab. Although the correlation between the assays was present, significant variances exist, some of which can be explained by a dilution-sensitive “prozone” effect.